US11060868B2 - Weak value amplification Coriolis vibratory gyroscope - Google Patents
Weak value amplification Coriolis vibratory gyroscope Download PDFInfo
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- US11060868B2 US11060868B2 US16/844,378 US202016844378A US11060868B2 US 11060868 B2 US11060868 B2 US 11060868B2 US 202016844378 A US202016844378 A US 202016844378A US 11060868 B2 US11060868 B2 US 11060868B2
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A42—HEADWEAR
- A42B—HATS; HEAD COVERINGS
- A42B3/00—Helmets; Helmet covers ; Other protective head coverings
- A42B3/04—Parts, details or accessories of helmets
- A42B3/06—Impact-absorbing shells, e.g. of crash helmets
- A42B3/062—Impact-absorbing shells, e.g. of crash helmets with reinforcing means
- A42B3/063—Impact-absorbing shells, e.g. of crash helmets with reinforcing means using layered structures
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- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01C—MEASURING DISTANCES, LEVELS OR BEARINGS; SURVEYING; NAVIGATION; GYROSCOPIC INSTRUMENTS; PHOTOGRAMMETRY OR VIDEOGRAMMETRY
- G01C19/00—Gyroscopes; Turn-sensitive devices using vibrating masses; Turn-sensitive devices without moving masses; Measuring angular rate using gyroscopic effects
- G01C19/58—Turn-sensitive devices without moving masses
- G01C19/64—Gyrometers using the Sagnac effect, i.e. rotation-induced shifts between counter-rotating electromagnetic beams
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A42—HEADWEAR
- A42B—HATS; HEAD COVERINGS
- A42B3/00—Helmets; Helmet covers ; Other protective head coverings
- A42B3/04—Parts, details or accessories of helmets
- A42B3/10—Linings
- A42B3/12—Cushioning devices
- A42B3/125—Cushioning devices with a padded structure, e.g. foam
- A42B3/128—Cushioning devices with a padded structure, e.g. foam with zones of different density
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01C—MEASURING DISTANCES, LEVELS OR BEARINGS; SURVEYING; NAVIGATION; GYROSCOPIC INSTRUMENTS; PHOTOGRAMMETRY OR VIDEOGRAMMETRY
- G01C19/00—Gyroscopes; Turn-sensitive devices using vibrating masses; Turn-sensitive devices without moving masses; Measuring angular rate using gyroscopic effects
- G01C19/56—Turn-sensitive devices using vibrating masses, e.g. vibratory angular rate sensors based on Coriolis forces
- G01C19/5642—Turn-sensitive devices using vibrating masses, e.g. vibratory angular rate sensors based on Coriolis forces using vibrating bars or beams
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01C—MEASURING DISTANCES, LEVELS OR BEARINGS; SURVEYING; NAVIGATION; GYROSCOPIC INSTRUMENTS; PHOTOGRAMMETRY OR VIDEOGRAMMETRY
- G01C19/00—Gyroscopes; Turn-sensitive devices using vibrating masses; Turn-sensitive devices without moving masses; Measuring angular rate using gyroscopic effects
- G01C19/56—Turn-sensitive devices using vibrating masses, e.g. vibratory angular rate sensors based on Coriolis forces
- G01C19/5642—Turn-sensitive devices using vibrating masses, e.g. vibratory angular rate sensors based on Coriolis forces using vibrating bars or beams
- G01C19/5649—Signal processing
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01C—MEASURING DISTANCES, LEVELS OR BEARINGS; SURVEYING; NAVIGATION; GYROSCOPIC INSTRUMENTS; PHOTOGRAMMETRY OR VIDEOGRAMMETRY
- G01C19/00—Gyroscopes; Turn-sensitive devices using vibrating masses; Turn-sensitive devices without moving masses; Measuring angular rate using gyroscopic effects
- G01C19/56—Turn-sensitive devices using vibrating masses, e.g. vibratory angular rate sensors based on Coriolis forces
- G01C19/5719—Turn-sensitive devices using vibrating masses, e.g. vibratory angular rate sensors based on Coriolis forces using planar vibrating masses driven in a translation vibration along an axis
- G01C19/5726—Signal processing
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01C—MEASURING DISTANCES, LEVELS OR BEARINGS; SURVEYING; NAVIGATION; GYROSCOPIC INSTRUMENTS; PHOTOGRAMMETRY OR VIDEOGRAMMETRY
- G01C19/00—Gyroscopes; Turn-sensitive devices using vibrating masses; Turn-sensitive devices without moving masses; Measuring angular rate using gyroscopic effects
- G01C19/58—Turn-sensitive devices without moving masses
- G01C19/64—Gyrometers using the Sagnac effect, i.e. rotation-induced shifts between counter-rotating electromagnetic beams
- G01C19/72—Gyrometers using the Sagnac effect, i.e. rotation-induced shifts between counter-rotating electromagnetic beams with counter-rotating light beams in a passive ring, e.g. fibre laser gyrometers
- G01C19/721—Details, e.g. optical or electronical details
Definitions
- the invention relates generally to gyroscopes.
- the invention describes a Coriolis vibratory gyroscope (CVG) using weak value amplification (WVA).
- CVG Coriolis vibratory gyroscope
- WVA weak value amplification
- Gyroscopes represent a type of inertial motion sensor called angular rate sensors, which traditionally employ a spinning flywheel to provide angular momentum that, when observed from a non-inertial reference frame, appears to move due to the Coriolis effect. Miniaturizations have led to much lighter and smaller gyroscopes with high precision.
- various exemplary embodiments provide a weak value amplification (WVA) Coriolis vibratory gyroscope (CVG) for measuring angular rate.
- WVA CVG includes a vibratory structure that induces a deflection; an optical weak value amplifier that amplifies the deflection as an amplified signal; and a weak value detector to measure the amplified signal to determine the angular rate.
- the exemplary WVA CVG includes a vibrating component and an optical readout component that employs WVA to enhance the sensitivity of the exemplary embodiment.
- the optical readout component is an interferometer mounted on a rigid plate, and the vibrating component is a small flat rectangular crystal. The crystal and the plate contact each other at one of the corners of the plate and the center of the flat surface of the crystal such that the crystal is symmetric about the corner of the plate.
- the corner of the plate is the symmetrical corner of an interferometer, where the opposite corner is the location at which a coherent laser beam enters and exits the interferometer.
- a beam of coherent laser light enters an interferometric loop via a beam-splitter that splits the beam into left and right beams.
- a combination of retarders introduce a small phase difference between the left and right beams.
- the crystal sits at the symmetric point of the loop and deflects about an axis passing parallel through the plane of its flat surface and perpendicular to the plate. This causes the left and right beams to displace within the plane of the plate.
- the beams recombine and exit the loop at the beam-splitter and the detector measures this displacement, amplified by the process of WVA.
- FIG. 1 is an isometric representational view of a piezoelectric crystal vibration structure
- FIG. 2 is a schematic view of a two state quantum system
- FIG. 3 is a graphical view of amplitude in relation to weak measurement
- FIG. 4 is a diagram view of a refractive weak measurement apparatus
- FIG. 5 is a diagram view of component orientations
- FIG. 6 is a diagram view of an exemplary CVG.
- This disclosure outlines a concept for a Coriolis vibratory gyroscope (CVG) that achieves significantly high precision through the use of quantum mechanical weak value amplification (WVA).
- CVG Coriolis vibratory gyroscope
- WVA quantum mechanical weak value amplification
- the exemplary concept enhances sensitivity of a gyroscope (gryo) by applying an adjunct quantum measurement technique.
- Conventional gyros applicable to such enhancements include CVGs, which come in several varieties: vibrating beams, forks, plates, shells, rings, etc.
- the proposed quantum measurement technique can be applied to any CVG to produce an angular rate measurement or whole angle measurement.
- FIG. 1 shows a schematic view 100 of a piezoelectric vibrating beam gyroscope structure 110 with a frame of reference 115 about a coordinate origin and having a pair of piezoelectric crystals 120 and 130 .
- Three orthogonal coordinate axes for the non-inertial reference frame include a vibration resonance drive axis 140 , a gyroscopic rotation axis 150 and a sense axis 160 .
- the first crystal 120 lies along a horizontal plane forming the drive and gyroscopic axes 140 and 150 .
- the second crystal 130 lies along a vertical plane formed by the gyroscopic and sense axes 150 and 160 .
- the structure 110 further includes a resonance oscillator 170 for inducing vibration via a wire loop 175 about the drive axis 140 , a demodulator 180 for signal conversion to analog via a wire loop 185 for vibrations about the sense axis 160 , and a low pass filter 190 for reducing signal noise, that leads to an output 195 .
- Such devices have resonant frequencies in the tens of kilohertz.
- the first crystal 120 is fixed at its proximal end to the origin within the inertial reference frame 115 , and attached at its distal end to the second crystal 130 lying in tandem along the sense axis 160 .
- the crystals 120 and 130 form a single beam, which is then driven to vibrate about the drive axis 140 via the resonance oscillator 170 .
- the vibrating structure 110 Upon application of rotation about the gyroscopic axis 150 , the vibrating structure 110 resists this force and begins to vibrate about the sense axis 160 .
- This induced vibration is measured from the non-inertial reference frame 115 and is used to determine the rate of rotation (i.e., angular velocity), or less commonly, the whole angle of rotation (i.e., orientation).
- An exemplary WVA CVG achieves significantly high precision through the use of quantum mechanical WVA.
- the proposed concept is for a hybrid quantum sensor that employs conventional gyroscope technology and enhances its sensitivity through the application of an adjunct quantum-optical measurement technique.
- the CVG contains a mechanical structure (e.g., beam or fork) set to vibrate along a drive axis 140 .
- a rotational force is applied about the gyroscopic axis 150 orthogonal to the oscillatory mode, vibrational energy transfers to the remaining orthogonal direction, namely the sense axis 160 .
- a common architecture for this type of device measures the induced response by reading out the angular deflection of the structure about the sense axis 160 and calculating the rotational force that causes the deflection.
- the capacitance C is:
- thermo-mechanical noise amplifies, which raises the limit of detection (LOD) or minimum detection limit (MDL).
- LOD limit of detection
- MDL minimum detection limit
- Using an optical read-out of the deflection eliminates the need to minimize the gap and instead the performance of an optical read-out scales in proportion to deflection sizes (i.e., larger deflections produce better resolution).
- the noise associated with the vibrational components is inversely proportional to their size.
- Optical read-out of CVG deflections is not a new concept, but reliable optical readout of the deflections in a CVG remains an active area of research.
- Nature published an article that detailed the research of a group at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) that demonstrated the feasibility of obtaining navigation-grade performance from an optically-read CVG.
- ORNL Oak Ridge National Laboratory
- the performance of the gyro in that article was ultimately limited by the optical read-out approach, suggesting that augmenting their CVG design with a WVA optical read-out can improve the performance of their device.
- FIG. 2 shows a diagram view 200 of a conceptual reflective WVA apparatus 210 .
- a laser 220 emits a coherent beam 230 with initial (pre-selected) wave function
- a mirror 250 reflects the beam, dividing the beam into a pass “horizontal”
- a pair of detectors 280 and 290 respectively receive the horizontal and vertical beams 260 and 270 .
- ⁇ j governing this behavior can be expressed as:
- FIG. 3 shows a graphical view 300 comparing amplitude with measurement.
- Unscaled measurement precision 310 denotes the abscissa while amplitude 320 represents the ordinate.
- q i has a high peak amplitude, whereas a widely distributed weak measurement 340 as quantity
- FIG. 4 shows a diagram view 400 of a conceptual refractive WVA apparatus 410 .
- the laser source 220 emits a light beam 230 arriving at a pre-selection filter 420 of initial wave function
- the resulting beam 430 enters a polarizing refractor 440 to be split as less refracted beam 450 and more refracted beam 455 .
- Both refracted beams arrive at a post-selection filter 460 of final wave function
- a weak interaction, in FIG. 5 is one in which the following equation is satisfied:
- ⁇ is the separation distance between beams 470 and 475
- ⁇ is a measure of how close to orthogonal the polarization axes of filters 420 and 460 are, in radians—a value of zero representing orthogonal
- w 0 is the beam waist.
- FIG. 5 shows a diagram view 500 of three orientations 510 , 520 and 530 for an exemplary quantum CVG apparatus 540 .
- a Cartesian coordinate frame 550 is shown for each orientation to identify drive (D) axis 140 , gyroscopic rotation (R) axis 150 and sense (S) axis 160 .
- the apparatus 540 includes a flat rigid plane 560 and a vibrating plate 570 that oscillates back and forth along the drive axis 140 .
- the rigid plane 560 (shown in orientation 510 as a square) denotes a thin flat plate with four corners, one corner 580 of which contacts the vibrating plate 570 to produce a 45° (or ⁇ /4) angle with the plane's two corresponding adjacent sides that form that corner.
- Orientation 510 faces the (R) (D) plane parallel to the rigid plane 560 with sense facing inward.
- Orientation 520 faces the (D) (S) plane with sense facing left.
- Orientation 530 faces the ( 3 ) (R) plane parallel to the vibrating plate 570 with sense facing downward.
- the vibrating plate 570 vibrates along the drive (D) axis 140 , which is normal to its surface. Rotation of the vibrating plate 570 about the rotation (R) axis 150 induces a vibration about the sense (S) axis 160 .
- FIG. 6 shows a diagram view 600 of an exemplary quantum CVG apparatus 610 .
- a frequency-stabilized helium neon (HeNe) laser 620 emits a light beam 230 that reflects by a first mirror 250 through a polarizer 630 and enters a beam-splitter 240 .
- the beam 230 subdivides to perpendicular right and up (or “left”) mirrors 250 .
- the apparatus 610 further includes a half-wave plate for shifting polarization of the left and right beams by 90° (or ⁇ /2) and a continuously variable retarder 650 for imparting a small phase shift.
- the retarder 650 can comprise fixed and movable birefringent wedges, as with a Soleil-Babinet compensator (SBC).
- SBC Soleil-Babinet compensator
- the split beam After reflecting from the up mirror 250 , the split beam passes the half-wave plate 640 , while after reflecting from the right mirror 250 , the split beam passes through the retarder 650 . Both split beams arrive at the vibrating plate 570 , reflect to their respective opposing mirrors returning to the beam-splitter 240 , and enter a detector 480 .
- the laser 620 , beam-splitter 240 , mirrors 250 , polarizer 630 , half-wave plate 640 , retarder 650 and detector 480 can attach to the rigid plane 560 .
- the exemplary apparatus 610 would weigh a fraction of a gram and have length dimensions in millimeters.
- the plane 560 serves as the non-inertial frame of reference 115 .
- the vibrating plate 570 serves as a rectangular piezoelectric crystal and vibrates, free from but within the rigid plane 560 , in response to rotations of interest. While applying a rotation about the rotation axis 150 , the vibrating plate 570 begins to vibrate about the sense axis 160 in proportion to the applied rotation rate. Measuring the frequency and amplitude with which the vibrating plate 570 oscillates about the sense axis 160 reveals the rotation rate that applies to the exemplary CVG 610 . Optically measuring this vibration involves a balanced Sagnac interferometer as provided. For this instrument, the path of the light forms a plane parallel to the rigid plane 560 , laterally offset from orientations 520 and 530 .
- the vibrating plate 570 is disposed in the light's path and used as the weak interaction.
- a reflective surface is etched onto the vibrating plate 570 . This can be accomplished, in the case of a crystal, with a focused ion beam to cause the reflected light to deflect slightly off the original path by an angle corresponding to the amplitude of the vibrations.
- the small positional shifts are amplified by a shift operator and observed in the position or momentum basis.
- the Coriolis effect responsible for the vibrations can be measured to much higher resolution.
- the “dark” port would be observed.
- the most common approach measures the spatial translation with an optical camera or a quadrant detector 480 .
- an optical measurement scheme eliminates the need to minimize the gap and instead its performance scales in proportion to deflection sizes (i.e., larger deflections produce better optical measurements).
- Conventional capacitance measurement approach is limited to an angular resolution on the order of magnitude of milli-radians, while an optical WVA measurement device 610 has demonstrated pico-radian performance—a potential improvement by nine orders of magnitude.
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Abstract
Description
where g is the gap between cathode and anode, ε0 is vacuum permittivity and A is area.
where α is the separation distance between
Claims (5)
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| US16/844,378 US11060868B2 (en) | 2019-04-09 | 2020-04-09 | Weak value amplification Coriolis vibratory gyroscope |
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| US201962831348P | 2019-04-09 | 2019-04-09 | |
| US16/844,378 US11060868B2 (en) | 2019-04-09 | 2020-04-09 | Weak value amplification Coriolis vibratory gyroscope |
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Cited By (2)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US20230184554A1 (en) * | 2021-12-10 | 2023-06-15 | Drs Network & Imaging Systems, Llc | Control of laser frequency in an optical gyroscope with a ring resonator |
| US12270653B2 (en) | 2022-04-14 | 2025-04-08 | United States Of America, As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy | Quantum weak-value birefringent Coriolis vibratory gyroscope |
Families Citing this family (1)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CN115515450A (en) | 2020-05-12 | 2022-12-23 | 米沃奇电动工具公司 | Hard hat with impact protection material |
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| US4572670A (en) * | 1982-10-25 | 1986-02-25 | Rockwell International Corporation | Interferometric piezoelectric change of state monitor |
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| US4572670A (en) * | 1982-10-25 | 1986-02-25 | Rockwell International Corporation | Interferometric piezoelectric change of state monitor |
| US5430342A (en) | 1993-04-27 | 1995-07-04 | Watson Industries, Inc. | Single bar type vibrating element angular rate sensor system |
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Cited By (3)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US20230184554A1 (en) * | 2021-12-10 | 2023-06-15 | Drs Network & Imaging Systems, Llc | Control of laser frequency in an optical gyroscope with a ring resonator |
| US12449257B2 (en) * | 2021-12-10 | 2025-10-21 | Drs Network & Imaging Systems, Llc | Control of laser frequency in an optical gyroscope with a ring resonator |
| US12270653B2 (en) | 2022-04-14 | 2025-04-08 | United States Of America, As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy | Quantum weak-value birefringent Coriolis vibratory gyroscope |
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| US20200240786A1 (en) | 2020-07-30 |
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